
Biochemist, mass spectrometry witch, caretaker for the nanoflow liquid chromatographs. Trans woman, lesbian. Recumbent cyclist. Wisconsin, USA
Back from three nights camping at a very lovely state forest campground. Lots of exercise hauling camera stuff up and down the hills! New tent, (REI Basecamp 4), which is very nice. Every new tent I get is a bit bigger than the previous one, something something getting old. Can just stand up in the center of this one, easy clearance for me if I'm looking down, can walk in and out ducking but not crawling. Lots easier to change clothes or apply insect repellent and sunscreen in it being able to stand. Though I did a bit of clothing changing outside since mid-week this time of year very very few people around. My very first experience being "topless" outdoors, since all the times over the previous decades as a dude with a beard and no breasts doesn't count, isn't anything like the same!
Full moon! Felt like a very @crepe thing going out at night nude under the full moon. Saw my shadow in moonlight! Turned to the right angle could see my breasts on my shadow. Very fun!
The full moon is next week while I'll be out camping. I'll get to hang out under the big bright moon out in the woods at night!
You are living through a very strange and extreme time for the Moon. She currently is capable of rising and setting at points on the horizon even further north than the sun does on the summer solstice, and even further south than the sun on the winter solstice. She can soar higer in the sky than the summer sun would ever hope to reach, or crawl lower along the horizon than the winter sun could, her low-to-the-ground appearance giving an illusion of hugeness a bit more convincing (imo) than the supermoon.
These most-extreme paths are called lunistices, or "lunar standstills", by analogy with solstices, a word meaning "solar standstill". A solstice is when the sun reaches her furthest rise/set points on the horizon and then "turns around", heading back the direction she came. A lunistice is the same thing but for the moon. But unlike solstices, you don't have to wait a year to see a lunistice, you only need to wait a couple weeks! She reaches both lunistices every single month!
The specific phase on which the high and low lunistices occur changes from lunar month to lunar month, but you can take a mental estimate based on proximity to the solstices/equinoxes. Which two phases are likely to be the high/low lunistice phases for a given season moves "backwards" thru the phase cycle over the course of the year.
| High Lunistice (highest phase) | Low Lunistice (lowest phase) | |
|---|---|---|
| Near Summer Solstice | 🌑 New (Not visible) | 🌕 Full (All Night) |
| Between Summer and Fall | 🌘 Wn. Cr. (Mornings) | 🌔 Wx. Gib. (Evenings) |
| Near Fall Equinox | 🌗 3rd Q. (Mornings) | 🌓 1st Q. (Evenings) |
| Between Fall and Winter | 🌖Wn. Gib. (Mornings) | 🌒 Wx. Cr. (Evenings) |
| Near Winter Solstice | 🌕 Full (All Night) | 🌑 New (Not visible) |
| Between Winter and Spring | 🌔 Wx. Gib. (Evenings) | 🌘 Wn. Cr. (Mornings) |
| Near Spring Equinox | 🌓 1st Q. (Evenings) | 🌗 3rd Q. (Mornings) |
| Between Spring and Summer | 🌒 Wx. Cr. (Evenings) | 🌖Wn. Gib. (Mornings) |
Anyways, This is a very remarkable time, and we haven't even seen the best of it; the difference between the moon's high and low lunistices will only get more extreme over the coming years, though admittedly not visibly by much- the rate of increasing difference of the lunistices is slowing down we approach the peak of a cycle almost 20 years in the making (18.6 to be precise). It will culminate in January 2025 with the most-extreme pair of lunistices, which are known collectively as the Major Lunar Standstill, or Major Lunistice (confusingly singularized, even though there is both a most-extreme High Lunistice and a most-extreme Low Lunistice). After the Major Lunar Standstill, every passing year will bring less and less exaggerated differences between the lunistices, until in 2034, the differences between the highest and lowest possible paths the moon can take will be noticeably diminished (the Minor Lunar Standstill)- and then the cycle will start again.
And yet, despite the fact that you are living through A Wonderful Astronomical Event You Will Not Witness Again Until 2043, there doesn't seem to be alot of awareness of it. There's no This Is How To See The Once-In-A-Decade Ultra-Rare Super Wolf Blue Piss-Moon type articles. I think there's a few reasons:
I dont have much more to say. Go out and look at the moon and think about the moon, its good for your brain. The best way to apprecate the lunistices is to just pay a little bit of attention every day or few, over the course of months and years. If you want a more sciencey description of lunistices, I recommend this page from the University of Massachussets.
Try to make predictions using the table I made about what phases will be high vs low, and test them out by going outside and trying to find the moon during those phases! It's alot of fun, its the perfect way to get a feel for the lunistices, and the Low Lunistice in particular is I think a great time for lunar photography if you can get a clear sightline, because the proximity to the horizon makes her look bigger and gives more chances for cool shots of terrestrial objects next to the moon. Right now in the northern hemisphere, the low lunistice is an evening crescent moon! So cool!
This post was the first I'd heard of this, and I'd never paid enough attention to the moon to notice anything like this myself.
One fun cohost thing for me was the people posting about the moon, I've become a lot more attentive to her and that's a nice little thing in my life now.